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versão On-line ISSN 2074-7705versão impressa ISSN 1609-9982

Verbum Eccles. (Online) vol.29 no.3 Pretoria 2008

MISSIOLOGY AND THE CHURCH IN AFRICA

The interdependence of public witness and institutional unity in the Dutch Reformed family of churches

D E de Villiers

University of Pretoria

ABSTRACT

The Belhar Confession of the then Dutch Reformed Mission Church officially approved in 1986 confesses that the unity of the church should be made visible. Very little has since then come of this visible unity in the family of Dutch Reformed churches. Since 1996, however, new impetus has been given to the effort to bring about institutional unity. It has especially been in their ministries of public witness and service that these churches succeeded to a large extent to give visible and institutional expression to their unity. This would hopefully enable the churches of the Dutch Reformed family to play a more effective public role in the present South African society. They, however, face two serious restrictions in this regard: the limited scope for churches to play a public role within the new liberal democratic dispensation in South Africa and the limited motivation to play a transforming public role in the churches of the Dutch Reformed family. In the article a few pre-conditions for playing an effective public role the churches of the Dutch Reformed family have to meet are discussed. The most important one is that these churches should achieve full institutional unity as soon as possible. The conclusion of the article is therefore that the interdependence of institutional unity and public witness is a reality they will have to deal with effectively if they want to move forward.

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Consulted literature

Agenda of the General Synod of the Dutch Reformed Church 2004. [ Links ]

Agenda of the General Synod of the Dutch Reformed Church 2007. [ Links ]

1 One of the great passions of my friend and colleague Piet Meiring as a Christian and theologian - apart from serving the mission of the church and reconciliation in South Africa and the world at large - has always been to work for the visible and institutional unity of the family of Dutch Reformed churches. I therefore thought it fit to dedicate this article to him. A shorter version was presented by me as a paper at a conference in Berlin on 29 September 2007 in commemoration of the 65th anniversary of prof. Wolfgang Huber, the present chairperson of the Council of the Evangelical Church in Germany.